The NSA warns enterprises to beware of third-party DNS resolvers

Yes, plaintext DNS is insane, but encrypting it has its own tradeoffs.

by Dan Goodin
Jan 15, 2021

DNS over HTTPS is a new protocol that protects domain-lookup traffic from 
eavesdropping and manipulation by malicious parties. Rather than an end-user 
device communicating with a DNS server over a plaintext channel—as DNS has done 
for more than three decades—DoH, as DNS over HTTPS is known, encrypts requests 
and responses using the same encryption websites rely on to send and receive 
HTTPS traffic.

Using DoH or a similar protocol known as DoT—short for DNS over TLS—is a no 
brainer in 2021, since DNS traffic can be every bit as sensitive as any other 
data sent over the Internet. On Thursday, however, the National Security Agency 
said in some cases Fortune 500 companies, large government agencies, and other 
enterprise users are better off not using it. The reason: the same encryption 
that thwarts malicious third parties can hamper engineers’ efforts to secure 
their networks.

...

https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2021/01/the-nsa-warns-enterprises-to-beware-of-third-party-dns-resolvers/



_______________________________________________
Medianews mailing list
Medianews@etskywarn.net
http://etskywarn.net/mailman/listinfo/medianews_etskywarn.net

Reply via email to